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Zinedine Zidane has stepped down as the coach of Real Madrid. I mention that first and foremost because I like to reflect on the past news to help me make sense of the current news. For example, to understand how a “Frankenstein government” (as Pedro Sánchez has been termed by you-know-who) has now taken office in Spain, it might help to read all previous 19 installments of this blog. The answer is very simple: Frankenstein is better than Francoist. I mean, here’s some of the other week’s news to help put the Friday vote of no confidence in perspective:

Following on from the Gürtel corruption verdicts, the wife of former PP treasurer, Luis Bárcenas (himself jailed for 33 years) managed to suddenly come up with the €200k bail finance to avoid going to prison herself – er, apparently because she has a 29 year old son at home (but who seems perfectly healthy, as far as I know). I’m not sure if this has anything to do with reports that Bárcenas has 14 briefcases of ‘explosive’ recordings to avenge his wife’s possible imprisonment … but it stinks, if you ask me. It stinks even more when you bear in mind that some of the Catalan politicians held in pre-trial detention for over 7 months now, 600km from home, without bail, and on trumped-up charges of ‘rebellion’, have very young children, including one who is under a year old, and also 3, 5 and 8 year olds. Don’t forget that. Never forget it.

Originally charged with terrorism, and also locked away for 500 days without trial, the youths of the Altsasu ‘bar brawl’ have now been convicted of ‘just’ public order offences – but their sentences still range from 9, 12 and 13 years in prison. The fight involved off-duty Civil Guard officers.

Spain’s (previous!) Interior Minister, Juan Ignacio Zoido, stated that Antonio González Pacheco, also known as the sadistic torturer ‘Billy el niño’, would be keeping a medal awarded to him over 40 years ago. Pacheco was a Madrid police inspector during the Franco era charged with multiple counts of torture and sought for extradition by an Argentine judge since 2014. He’s keeping his medal …

It emerged that the department of Spain’s (previous!) Foreign Minister, Alfonso Dastis, was offering €12,000 to any foreign correspondent who could write the most positive things about Spain. You see, they don’t want us to write about innocent Catalan citizens being beaten up for voting, or rappers jailed, or yellow T-shirts being taken off you before football matches, or government bribery and corruption, or censoring art exhibitions, or banning yellow ribbons, or maintaining Franco’s mausoleum and the ‘honorary’ title of duchy of Franco, or being charged for insulting God or the Virgin Mary, or any other attacks on freedom of speech. My friend, Graham Keeley, The Times correspondent in Spain, wrote a light piece for the newspaper’s ‘Thunderer’ column, under the title ‘Spain won’t improve its image by giving journalists money’. He concluded: ‘If the Spanish government wants to improve its image, it would be best employed explaining its actions in Catalonia.’ Needless to say, I won’t be receiving the €12k, either. I get criticised for never writing anything positive about Spain in this blog, but I hope to rectify that soon. In the meantime, Mr.Dastis, I highly recommend this ‘love letter’ of mine to Madrid: ‘A Load of Bull’ – and you might even laugh out loud a few times.

So, the big news was that yesterday, Pedro Sánchez, 46, leader of the Socialist PSOE party, was sworn in as the new Prime Minister of Spain, in front of Felipe VI at the Zarzuela palace, promising to fulfil the obligations of the Spanish Constitution in a short ceremony, yet without using a Bible or a crucifix (as if that last bit really matters, but it did cause a bit of consternation amongst some of the right-wing PP press). On the same day, and approximately the same hour, a new Catalan government was officially formed, led by Quim Torra, and Article 155 was finally removed, ending the suspension of home rule after 219 days, or nearly 8 months. As for Rajoy, he was packing his bags (or shredding documents and filling up bin bags). You couldn’t really make it up, could you?

Just look at all the odds. Never before has a no confidence motion succeeded in Spain (only last year Rajoy survived a motion of no confidence led by Podemos). Not so long ago, Pedro Sánchez was a finished politician. He’d been ousted as the leader of his own party, and had abandoned his seat in parliament, all thanks to political backstabbing back in October 2016 – and he then made a comeback by appealing to the PSOE grassroots groups. Last year, he was unexpectedly re-elected to lead the party, yet only a few weeks ago they were still trailing at around 20% of the vote in the polls – and some people were even questioning the relevance of his party (me included). Never before has a non-MP become the Prime Minister, and never before has the PM been someone who has previously lost an election. How on earth did he become Prime Minister of Spain?

Well … I personally can’t believe Rajoy lasted so long. If you’ve been following this blog since the very first ‘inept’ entry about him, you might understand why. I think he was utterly incompetent, and he failed, he failed miserably, despite being a so-called ‘politician’ – to ever really do politics. He used the courts and his police forces instead! Not only that, but his party is clearly stained with corruption, with most of its heirarchy still entrenched in Franco’s past. Albert Rivera, the leader of Ciudadanos (the one who doesn’t see blues or reds, etc, he only sees Spaniards) accused Sánchez of taking office ‘through the back door’, without first getting elected, and forming a ‘Frankenstein government’, reliant on far-left politicians and regional nationalist parties that want to break up Spain. Rivera called it a ‘terrible day for Spain’. But, no, Albert, it’s not. I have criticised Pedro Sánchez in recent weeks, for wanting to change the definition of ‘rebellion’, for example – and for calling Quim Torra a racist and supremacist. But right now, and with the PSOE backed up by Podemos (with whom I wish they would formalise a true coalition), I actually think it’s the best thing that could have happened to Spain. Pedro Sánchez is not going to have an easy run at all, but he has become the Prime Minister of Spain because the alternative was an utter failure and damaging the image of Spain. Whether you like it or not, the alternative was, and still is, ‘Francoist’. And whilst that is still simmering away, I believe Spain is far better off with Frankenstein.

Sarah Carlton

June 3, 2018 at 9:57pm

Once again a great summary of the week that was in Spain. Thank you Tim – it is good to see that word ‘previous’ written more than once. I am just gutted that I did not go and put my bet on at the bookies last time I was in the UK in March that M.Rajoy would be out by the end of 2017, I was prepared to loose £50 but I could have been in the money! My hope is that the rest of Spain will be able to see what Ciudadanos really are before the next election.

Monique Verhulst

June 4, 2018 at 10:16am

Great article like always!! It must be dificult to write an article about the situation in Spain and Catalunya…not because a lack of information but more because of an excess of it. Just like you said, things moving in and around the PP are stinking as rotten. Sometimes when I watch the news, I almost think I’m watching “Peyton Place”

alex simpson

June 4, 2018 at 2:12pm

There have now been two periods of Partido Popular rule. Two.

The first ended with Aznar ringing journalists, and sending all of his cabinet and spokespeople to every interview saying that ETA were responsible for the 2004 Madrid train bombing – lying to the population of Spain during a General Election, in the knowledge that the truth that it had been Al Qaeda damaged them.

The second, a party mired in corruption at local, regional and national level, is not befit of a 21st Century European country.

I’d like to think that this should mean that several generations should come and go before the PP are allowed to control Spain’s purse-strings again, but such is the state of the country that i’m not holding my breath…….

Carles

June 4, 2018 at 3:03pm

Thanks for the update. Really good account of events may I just add that one of the accused for the Altsasu bar brawl was the waiter from the bar accross the street that recorded the events on his mobile. The civil gard walking out on his on feet, clean white shirt on, could be easily recognised there. This active expectator was recognised by one of the civil gards weeks later and accused of acts. He’s been given a 12 years sentence because he couldn’t demonstrate his innocence. He’ll make at least 7 by the time Strasburg changes the verdict. This is a heavy message for those vascs that want to show evidence of police repression.

An in some ways naive US denizen over 70 yrs old, I just now gasped at hearing of an EU state whose laws embrace the chilling principle I call “reverse burden of proof” –that the burden of proof is on an accused to demonstrate his/her innocence, rather than on the state to demonstrate guilt. Last I read, this obtains also in Quebec, which to me would make it quite prudent for the rest of Canada to accede to the (dormant) Quebecois desire to withdraw from the Federation. In dry logic, “to prove a negative” is oxymoronic. In human jurisprudence it could stand as a definition of systemic injustice. It reeks with an Orwellian essence of fascism. Given that the overall motivation for the EU itself was to stave off fascism for the generations to come, this “reverse burden of proof” in any single member state constitutes an iceberg gash in the skin of the Titanic for the whole EU enterprise.

For the immediate present, I’m wondering whether the renewed judicial process in the Puigdemont affair is clouded by this very flaw. –DZ

Eva Möckel

wally bell

June 7, 2018 at 2:17pm

Great article, Tim. I have your book (Load of Bull) which is also excellent and entertaining. I worry about Spain as a frequent traveller and fair speaker of castellano. Here is a golden opportunity to do something about the corruption in politics. Is Rajoy still ‘protected’ from the law or can he now be pursued by the courts for being dishonest (perjury perhaps since it was during the Gurtel case)? And maybe some of the other practices allegedly undertaken by his PP party?